For a Halloween display in her dining room, Lisa tops her usually empty terra-cotta pots with white faux pumpkins and scraggly dried moss. Ripped cheesecloth gives the illusion of cobwebs on candelabra, and fake crows perch on the centerpiece.

Throughout the home, rooms dressed in mostly white with stainless-steel, brown and black accents highlight Lisa's curious collections. She and husband Jeff, an internist and hobby carpenter, remodeled the house, once a modest 1,000-square-foot cottage, to add space for their three kids and to create an industrial look with farmhouse and cottage features. But it's their vintage pieces, especially the offbeat ones, that give the home its unexpected style.

A wild boar's head snarls above the fireplace. Other taxidermy -- alligator heads, chickens and rabbits -- inhabit shelves throughout the first floor. In honor of Jeff's medical profession, a skeleton dangles on an iron coat rack in a living room corner. Scorpions and tarantulas in glass frames bring frightening flair to bookshelves. "I think it's fun to have quirky things that people comment on," Lisa says.

Lisa repurposed an antique coffin dolly (found at an estate sale for $5) as the base of a concrete-top coffee table in the living room. Ostrich and emu eggs and a bear skull create a unique arrangement under cloches.

Most of Lisa's treasures come from local estate and garage sales. Her must-have pieces change constantly, and not all have an eerie aura. "I'm attracted to certain materials," Lisa says. Miniature metal buildings, terra-cotta pots, stainless-steel medical furniture and pages from agricultural farm charts are favorites. Artifacts not showcased in Lisa's home end up on the shelves at Hunt and Gather, an eclectic Minneapolis antiques shop where she is a dealer.

Gothic architectural detailing on the island contrasts the white and stainless-steel kitchen, where Lisa and daughter Kate make caramel apples.

DIY projects helped Lisa and Jeff save money while adding innovative design. In the kitchen, they converted a salvaged church altar into an island, adding a concrete countertop to match the floors. Restaurant-style, stainless-steel lower cabinets complement Jeff's white upper cabinets. Along the perimeter, stainless-steel countertops stand up to heavy use. "You can set anything hot on it, and it doesn't destroy it," Lisa says.